Shortly after mounting a large scale solo show at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center in June, I was fortunate to be cast in “Ludlow, 1914”, an original play commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Ludlow Massacre. The ambitious play sought to shed light on the now largely forgotten event – one of the most important and momentous in Colorado history.

The devised new work was created by Brian Freeland and The LIDA Project – a meta media art collective dedicated to experimental live performance. The production consisted of a cast of 18 actors playing multiple roles and an even larger technical design team and crew. Through an expressionistic and physically-based series of scenes – a dramatic vaudeville – the play wove together a variety of narratives and layers of meaning regarding natural history, coal extraction, workers’ rights, wealth inequality, and many other relevant issues.

I am so grateful to have been a part of this unique and exciting collective endeavor. It was a great adventure and a wonderfully enriching collaborative experience! There were 14 performances at the Dusty Loo Bon Vivant Theater, September 11 – 28, 2014.

I pray you all give your audience,And hear this matter with reverence,By figure a moral play-The Summoning of Everyman called it is,That of our lives and ending showsHow transitory we be all day.This matter is wondrous precious,But the intent of it is more gracious,And sweet to bear away.

“Everyman”, the 16th century anonymous morality play, was brought into a contemporary setting by Murray Ross for the Theatreworks production of “Everyman on the Bus”. It was insightfully staged on a real city bus – where the audience filled the seats and the actors performed in the aisle and boarded and disembarked the bus at prescribed stops. The redemptive journey of Everyman, then, became the audiences’ journey too, as Everyman faced his life’s reckoning and the reality of his own mortality.

The cast consisted of 15 actors, many playing multiple characters. I performed the role of “Knowledge”. I am so grateful to have been a part of this wonderful and very special production and to have had the opportunity to work with such a fun and dedicated cast and crew. There were 38 shows that ran from February 21 – March 17, 2013. The bus and the show carried on throughout all manner of weather: rain. wind, snow, and even a blizzard!

Here’s a photo of me as Knowledge at the final bus stop, the cemetery, on a particularly cold and snowy night. Photo: Carol Dass

“Riding the bus through the streets of Colorado Springs on a dark winter night, one cannot avoid the sensation that this journey, for each of us, is a dim, lonely, and ominous one. It’s a sensation that would be difficult, if not impossible, to reproduce in a theater. On the bus, the experience is a natural one. As transportation, buses tend to equalize us all; at one time or another we have all ridden one. We know it can be a long, lonely ride….Ross’ direction is steady, with flashes of brilliance. His touch for the climactic final scene is beautiful, sensitive, and extremely effective. He has made this final accounting for Everyman an exquisite personal experience.”

In mid-July I was contacted by Murray Ross, a good friend and the Artistic Director of Theatreworks at the University of Colorado / Colorado Springs, who was in the process of writing an original play celebrating the life and work of the famed inventor Nikola Tesla. To my surprise and delight, he invited me to participate in the play, “I Am Nikola Tesla”. Several months prior to our conversation, I had told Murray that the theater had compelled me many years ago. And now he thought that there might be an acting role for me in his new play. In the 2 months that followed, through many discussions and improvisation sessions that included the 5 participating cast members, a play was born. To be an integral part in the creation of a new play and a new character was an amazing experience and truly an honor. Even the seasoned actors commented on the uniqueness of the endeavor. Every moment of this collaborative ensemble project—from initial improvisations, hours spent rehearsing the ever-evolving script, to the finished play’s successful performances, was incredibly special.

There were 15 performances at the Dusty Loo Bon Vivant Theater from September 16 – October 3, 2010. The cast included: Michael Cobb – Nikola Tesla, Sammie Joe Kinnett – Luke, Ludmila Bokievsky – Andjela, Bob Nash – Rex, and I played the role of Izzy.

Scene 7, Luke is digging a hole in his mother’s basement, while Izzy tries to clear away some of the dirt. Photo: Tom Kimmell

In an interesting side note, Murray informed me that my performance on the Theatreworks stage was the first by an Asian actress in the theater’s 35 year history. I am deeply moved to find myself in that notable position. So very grateful to have been given the opportunity to appear on the Theatreworks stage.

An excerpt from the Director’s notes published in the “I Am Nikola Tesla” program:

“This play is the result of an invention from the Pikes Peak Library District to create something theatrical about Nikola Tesla and his visit to Colorado Springs in the summer of 1899. He came to our town to test and develop his new radical theories involving the wireless transmission of energy. Reports of mysterious activity in his laboratory in his laboratory east of town have become the stuff of legend. Tesla himself was an extraordinary character, something of a European dandy, a visionary thinker, a marvelous self promoter, and the prototype of the mad scientist.

Very early in our process we decided not to create a documentary play—that sort of thing has already been done, and very well, for television. We felt that since Tesla was so much about the future, so deeply committed to innovation, the proper was of honoring him was to create an entirely new play, set in the present. And so we have.

Most everything Tesla says in this play is taken from Tesla’s own writing—which is very extensive. Everything else is entirely invented. Our work has been collaborative from the beginning, and if you hear anything that sounds genuine, half way clever, or interesting during these ninety minutes, chances are it originated with the actors themselves, who have been more than instrumental in creating their characters. For the rest you may rightly blame the mad scientist of THEATREWORKS….”